Soft modes in Fermi liquids at arbitrary temperatures
D. Belitz, T.R. Kirkpatrick

TL;DR
This paper uses kinetic theory to analyze soft modes in Fermi liquids across temperature regimes, revealing their nature, spectrum, and how they evolve from collisionless to hydrodynamic behavior, with implications for quantum phase transitions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of soft modes in Fermi liquids at arbitrary temperatures, clarifying their physical origins and spectral properties in different regimes.
Findings
Hydrodynamic regime modes align with Navier-Stokes predictions.
Collisionless regime features a continuous soft mode spectrum.
Temperature increase causes damping and overdamping of collisionless modes.
Abstract
We use kinetic-theory methods to analyze Landau Fermi-liquid theory, and in particular to investigate the number and nature of soft modes in Fermi liquids, both in the hydrodynamic and the collisionless regimes. In the hydrodynamic regime we show that Fermi-liquid theory is consistent with Navier-Stokes hydrodynamics at all temperatures. The soft modes are the ones familiar from classical hydrodynamics that are controlled by the five conservation laws; namely, two first-sound modes, two shear diffusion modes, and one heat diffusion mode. These modes have a particle-like spectrum and are soft, or scale invariant, at all temperatures. In the collisionless regime we show that the entire single-particle distribution function is soft with a continuous part of the spectrum. This continuous soft mode, which is well known but often not emphasized, has important physical consequences, e.g., for…
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